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Disability and LGBTQ identities

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Disability and LGBTQ+ identity can both play significant roles in the life of an individual.Disability and sexuality can oftenintersect, for many people being bothdisabled andLGBTQ+ can result in double marginalization.[1][2] The two identities, either by themselves or in tandem, can complicate questions ofdiscrimination (in workplaces, schools, or otherwise) and can affect access to resources such as accommodations, support groups, andelder care.

LGBTQ+ identity and its relationship to disability has also been analyzed by academics. LGBTQ+ identities have beenpathologized as mental disorders by some groups, both historically and in the present.[3][4][5] Alternatively, some activists, scholars, and researchers have suggested that under thesocial model of disability, society's failures to accommodate and include LGBTQ+ people makes such an identity function as a disability.[6]

Rates of disability

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In general, studies have found that LGBTQ+ populations report higher rates of disability than the general population.

In studies looking at populations in the United States, LGBTQ populations report higher rates of disability compared to theheterosexual andcisgender majorities.[1][7][8] According to the Movement Advance Project in 2019, an estimated 3 to 5 million lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the United States have a disability.[9] A 2022 report about the United States by theHuman Rights Campaign reported that 36% of LGBTQ+ adults have self reported having a disability while 24% of non-LGBTQ adults self reported having a disability.[10] A 2024 report on American LGBTQ youth found that 29.7% of the 3,100 youth polled were diagnosed with a disability, with these numbers being higher for trans youth (33.3%) than cisgender LGBQ+ youth (20.6%).[11]

In a 2020 study of Australian LGBTQ people, 38% of respondents reported having at least one disability.[12]

In a 2022 study of Canadians with disabilities, 8.7% of the disabled population also identified as 2S (two-spirit) or LGBTQ+. The same study found that "the 2SLGBTQ+ population with disabilities is younger than the non-2SLGBTQ+ population with disabilities". Of the 2SLGBTQ+ population with disabilities, the majority (69.9%) reported a disability related to mental health.[13]

In China, a rough estimate ofcantong, or LGBTQ people with disabilities, is about 5 million people.[14]

Academic theory

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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(January 2024)

Academic research on disability andLGBTQ identities examines how social norms go beyond to shape an individual's understanding of commodities and norms such as ability, sexuality, and gender. Disability studies emerged in the late twentieth century as an academic discipline with criticisms towards early approaches to disability that depended on exploitation within the entertainment industry[15] and medical institutions.[16] Similar to the academic discipline of disability,queer theory has risen in popularity due to the shared critique ofwhite feminism in the 90s, attempting to universalize individuals assigned female at birth (AFAB), including the negligence of medical research and media coverage of theAIDS Crisis.[17]

Intersectional approaches to the two fields were brought to fruition with academic coverage of historical events such as theeugenics movement in America that sterilized disabled individuals[18] and theHolocaust in Germany that led a mass movement of genocide to disabled and homosexual people.[19] Notable scholars in the field such asEli Clare,Alison Kaefer, andRobert McRuer drew inspiration from the early works ofMichel Foucault in theHistory of Sexuality[20] and women of color's memoirs regarding the body, such asAudre Lord'sCancer Journals[21].

Approaches in disability studies and queer theory draw on the shared and nuanced experiences on estranged family relationships, facing violence, and social exclusion.[22]

For example, theoristRobert McRuer has usedAdrienne Rich's idea ofcompulsory heterosexuality to examine how society might also perpetuate "compulsory able-bodiness".[23] InFeminist, Queer, Crip,Alison Kafer's "engagement with the intersections of gender and cripping time is never stronger than in the instances where she makes explicit the mainstream responses to gendered disability narratives".[24]

History

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Until 1990, theWorld Health Organization classified homosexuality as a mental disorder.[3] In 2019, the organization also removed "gender identity disorder", referring totransgender people, from theInternational Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems.[25]

United States

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Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR), a group founded byMarsha P. Johnson andSylvia Rivera, worked both to support trans and gay people and disabled people.[26] STAR called for the end of non-consensual psychiatric incarcerations of LGBTQ+ individuals, something Johnson had experienced in her life.[26]

Other activists in the United States involved in both the gay rights and the disability rights movements includeKenny Fries,[27]Barbara Jordan, andConnie Panzarino.[28]

In the late 1970s, disabled attendees and groups were recorded atSan Francisco Pride.[29]

In the 1980s and early 1990s, the case ofSharon Kowalski was taken up by both disability and gay rights activists.[28] Kowalski, a lesbian, had become disabled after a car accident, and her father had been awarded custody of her. Her father then moved Kowalski to a nursing home five hours away from her partner, Karen Thompson, and prevented Thompson from visiting Kowalski. In a victory for both groups of activists, theMinnesota Court of Appeals ruled that Thompson be made Kowalski's legal guardian, in line with Kowalski's wishes.

Disability Pride Month was founded in 1990, inspired by bothgay andBlack pride.[28]

In June 2014, theWhite House hosted a panel on LGBT issues and disability.[30]

Medical care

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Until 1973, homosexuality was included in theDiagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.[3][4][31] Although many gay liberation activists celebrated its removal, others were blase or wary about aligning the wider community withpsychiatric associations or providers.[32] Before its removal, bothanti-psychiatric and gay liberation activists had used homosexuality's inclusion in the DSM as leverage to criticize psychiatry as a whole.[32]

In the late 1970s,Bobbie Lea Bennett became the first trans woman to have hergender-affirming surgery covered byMedicare. Bennett, as a wheelchair user withosteogenesis imperfecta, was already covered by the policy, which forced the courts to decide whether the surgery was considered a "legitimate medical treatment"; up until this point, transgender activists trying to have their surgeries covered under the policy had to argue that being transgender, in and of itself, was a disability.[33]

TheAmericans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) made disability aprotected class in the United States. However, the law purposefully excluded homosexuality, bisexuality, and "[t]ransvestitism, transsexualism...[and] gender identity disorders not resulting from physical impairments" from the act's definition of disability.[6] This exclusion has led to some cases in which prosecutors have argued thatgender dysphoria is a "gender identity disorder" and therefore cannot be accommodated under the ADA.[6] In 1998,Bragdon v. Abbott confirmed thatHIV was considered a protected disability under the ADA, which has been used to protect HIV-positive individuals in years since, many of whom are members of the LGBT community.[6]

In 2017, Kate Lynn Blatt became the first trans woman allowed to sue her employer under the ADA for not accommodating her gender dysphoria.[34]

Challenges

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LGBTQ+ individuals with disabilities are subject to higher rates of childhood bullying[35] and lack of comprehensive sex education.[35]

LGBTQ+ individuals with disabilities who are assisted by family or caregivers may have more difficulty finding time to be intimate with or have sex with their partners.[36] Those who live in group homes might similarly have difficulties with maintaining privacy within relationships.[36] People who cannot drive or require assistance while traveling may have more limited opportunities to attend LGBTQ+ support groups, community spaces, or events.[36]

Limited travel opportunities may lead some disabled LGBTQ+ people, especially those living in socially conservative areas, to pursue online or long-distance relationships.[14]

Discrimination

[edit]

Medical care

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In some cases, medical providers or other authorities will use a transgender person's disability status to deny themgender-affirming care, using the argument that the person is not capable enough to giveinformed consent for such care.[6] Similarly, people may deny LGBTQ+ self-identification on the basis of someone's disability, particularlyintellectual disability.[37]

Alternatively, LGBTQ+ individuals may avoid seeking needed medical care, such as STI testing,[38] or accessing disability services because of prejudiced comments or treatment by their healthcare providers.[6][39][40] Those who do seek medical care, but do not disclose their identity, may have adverse health consequences when their identity is not taken into account by their physicians.[40]

LGBTQ+ individuals with disabilities that need in-home care may be especially vulnerable, as they may be less likely to have family that can care for them, and nurses or other hired caregivers may make prejudiced or uneducated statements to their patients.[37][36][41][42][43][44] Some individuals may choose to change their appearance or behavior so as to appear straight or cisgender to caregivers.[41] For people who are unsure of their sexual or gender identity, caregivers or assistants may be unwilling to discuss the topic with their client.[36]

Interpersonal relationships

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Both LGBTQ+ people and people with disabilities face high rates of sexual assault compared to the general population; for people who are both LGBTQ+ and disabled, the statistics are even higher.[8]

Employment

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Limited opportunities for employment may drive some disabled LGBTQ+ people to remainedcloseted at work, to avoid being fired.[14] For disabled individuals who areout, their disability and LGBTQ+ identity may further limit job opportunities.[45]

A 2020 study of American lawyers found that nearly 60% of respondents who were both LGBTQ+ and disabled reported having experienced discrimination in the workplace related to their identities.[46]

Intercommunity issues

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A common complaint among disabled LGBTQ+ people is that the LGBTQ+ community does not discuss disability, and the disabled community does not discuss LGBTQ+ identities. This is particularly an issue among the LGBTQ+ movements in countries such as China[14] and Nepal.[45]

Within the LGBTQ+ community, accessibility remains an important issue.[9][47] Not all LGBTQ+ community spaces have accessible buildings or parking,sign language interpretation,Braille signage, orTTY services.[9][48] LGBTQ+ events, such as Pride events and marches, may have routes which are difficult to navigate for those in wheelchairs or using mobility devices, or spaces that are overwhelming for those with sensory sensitivities.[49][50] Lectures, gatherings, or film screenings may lack sign language interpretation orclosed captions.[49] This may be further complicated by limited budgets that organizations or groups have, leaving little funding to better cater to disabled people.[51]

Ableism more widely is also an issue within the LGBTQ+ community.[36][52][53] LGBTQ+ people with disabilities have expressed that a focus in the community on appearance can lead to disabled people feeling excluded or undesirable as partners.[47][54][55][56][57][58] Attitudes that disabled people are inherentlyasexual are also still prevalent.[55]

Within disabled communities, homophobia and transphobia remain as important issues.[47]

Related organizations

[edit]

Multiple organizations have been founded that specifically aim to serve those in the LGBTQ+ community with disabilities. International organizations include Blind LGBT Pride International.[59]

In the U.S., these includeServices & Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE). In the U.K., these include Brownton Abbey,[60] Deaf Rainbow UK,[60] ParaPride,[55] and Regard.[60] In Australia there is Inclusive Rainbow Voices (IRV)[61] and Rainbow Rights & Advocacy.[10]

In media

[edit]

Disabled LGBTQ+ characters in film and television tend to be rare; a 2021 report byGLAAD found zero such characters in any major American movie releases that year.[62] Their 2022 report found that only 27 characters - 4.5% of all counted LGBTQ+ characters - were also disabled.[63] However, films and television shows featured disabled and LGBTQ+ characters do exist, such asMargarita with a Straw (2014), an Indian film about a bisexual student withcerebral palsy,[64]Queer as Folk (2022), an American series which features a wheelchair-using side character, andSpecial (2019), an American series about a gay man withcerebral palsy.[65] Such characters have also been included in some children's shows, includingThe Dragon Prince (2018), which has a recurringDeaf lesbian character, andDead End: Paranormal Park (2022), which has an autistic bisexual protagonist.

SomeLGBTQ+ magazines have specifically addressed a disabled audience, such as the magazineDykes, Disability & Stuff, fromMadison, Wisconsin, which was founded in the late 1980s and was published until 2001.[66] More general LGBTQ+ magazines have also addressed disability; lesbian magazineSinister Wisdom, for example, made "On Disability" the theme of their Winter 1989/1990 issue.[67]

See also

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Further reading

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Understanding Disability in the LGBTQ+ Community".Human Rights Campaign. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  2. ^Santinele Martino, Alan (May 2017)."Cripping sexualities: An analytic review of theoretical and empirical writing on the intersection of disabilities and sexualities".Sociology Compass.11 (5) e12471.doi:10.1111/soc4.12471.
  3. ^abcDrescher, Jack (2015-12-04)."Out of DSM: Depathologizing Homosexuality".Behavioral Sciences.5 (4):565–575.doi:10.3390/bs5040565.ISSN 2076-328X.PMC 4695779.PMID 26690228.
  4. ^abKunzel, Regina (2018-07-10), Rembis, Michael; Kudlick, Catherine; Nielsen, Kim E. (eds.),"The Rise of Gay Rights and the Disavowal of Disability in the United States",The Oxford Handbook of Disability History (1 ed.), Oxford University Press, pp. 459–476,doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190234959.013.27,ISBN 978-0-19-023495-9, retrieved2023-08-11
  5. ^"Professionally speaking: challenges to achieving equality for LGBT people".European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights. 2016-03-01. Retrieved2023-08-11.
  6. ^abcdefRodríguez-Roldán, Victoria (2020-01-01)."The Intersection Between Disability and LGBT Discrimination and Marginalization".American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law.28 (3).
  7. ^Fredriksen-Goldsen, Karen I.; Kim, Hyun-Jun; Barkan, Susan E. (January 2012)."Disability Among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Adults: Disparities in Prevalence and Risk".American Journal of Public Health.102 (1):e16 –e21.doi:10.2105/AJPH.2011.300379.ISSN 0090-0036.PMC 3490559.PMID 22095356.
  8. ^ab"LGBTQ+ People with Disabilities".GLAAD. 2022-02-21. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  9. ^abc"LGBT PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES"(PDF).Movement Advancement Project.
  10. ^ab"Understanding Disability in the LGBTQ+ Community".The Human Rights Campaign. 2022-08-12. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  11. ^"2024 Disabled LGBTQ+ Youth Report".Human Rights Campaign. Retrieved2024-11-19.
  12. ^Hill, A. O.; Bourne, A.; McNair, R.; Carman, M.; Lyons, A. (2020).Private Lives 3: The health and wellbeing of LGBTIQ people in Australia(PDF). ARCSHS Monograph Series No. 122. Melbourne, Australia: Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health and Society,La Trobe University.ISBN 978-0-6488887-4-1.
  13. ^"A profile of 2SLGBTQ+ persons with disabilities, 2022".Statistics Canada.Government of Canada. 2024-07-08. Retrieved2024-11-19.
  14. ^abcdYiying, Fan (Feb 22, 2018)."China's Gay and Disabled Face Double Discrimination".Sixth Tone. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  15. ^Clare, Eli.Exile and Pride: Disability, Queerness, and Liberation. With Aurora Levins Morales and Dean Spade. Duke University Press, 2015.
  16. ^Umair Mirza.Encyclopedia Of Disability- Volume 1. 2006. http://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofdisabilityvolume1.
  17. ^Umair Mirza.Encyclopedia Of Disability- Volume 3. 2006. http://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofdisabilityvolume3.
  18. ^Miller, Lulu.Why Fish Don’t Exist: A Story of Loss, Love, and the Hidden Order of Life. Simon & Schuster, 2020. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/berkeley-ebooks/detail.action?docID=6174402.
  19. ^Clare, Eli.Exile and Pride: Disability, Queerness, and Liberation. With Aurora Levins Morales and Dean Spade. Duke University Press, 2015.
  20. ^Foucault, Michel.The History of Sexuality: An Introduction. 1st ed. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2012. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/berkeley-ebooks/detail.action?docID=6084793.
  21. ^Lorde, A. (2020).The cancer journals / Audre Lorde ; foreword by Tracy K. Smith. Penguin Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC. https://samples.overdrive.com/?crid=d0442983-43a3-4b68-8804-a4fd775a4cb6&.epub-sample.overdrive.com
  22. ^Sherry, Mark. “Overlaps and Contradictions between Queer Theory and Disability Studies.”Disability & Society 19, no. 7 (2010): 769–83. https://doi.org/10.1080/0968759042000284231.
  23. ^McRuer, Robert (2016-10-19)."Compulsory Able-Bodiedness and Queer/Disabled Existence". In Davis, Lennard J. (ed.).The Disability Studies Reader. Taylor & Francis.ISBN 978-1-317-39786-1.
  24. ^Kannen, Victoria (4 March 2015). "Feminist, queer, crip".Journal of Gender Studies.24 (2):247–248.doi:10.1080/09589236.2015.1005970.S2CID 143030310.
  25. ^"WHO Drops Being Transgender from List of 'Mental Disorders'".Time. 2019-05-28. Retrieved2023-08-11.
  26. ^abBrownworth, Victoria A. (2020-10-20)."The Intersection Of LGBTQ+ History And Disability".Philadelphia Gay News. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  27. ^Wolfe, Kathi (2022-09-28)."Author Kenny Fries on being queer, disabled, and Jewish".Washington Blade. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  28. ^abc"Pride and Protest – LGBT+ Disability Activism, 1985-1995".review.gale.com. 2021-12-03. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  29. ^"1977 and 1978 Gay Freedom Day Parade video".GLBT Historical Society. Retrieved2023-08-11.
  30. ^"Disability Justice Is LGBT Justice: A Conversation with Movement Leaders".Center for American Progress. 2015-07-30. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  31. ^Winterhalter, Elizabeth (2021-05-26)."How LGBTQ+ Activists Got "Homosexuality" out of the DSM".JSTOR Daily. Retrieved2023-08-11.
  32. ^abLewis, Abram J. (2016). ""We Are Certain of Our Own Insanity": Antipsychiatry and the Gay Liberation Movement, 1968–1980".Journal of the History of Sexuality.25 (1):83–113.doi:10.7560/JHS25104.ISSN 1043-4070.JSTOR 24616618.S2CID 146703192.
  33. ^Matte, Nicholas (November 2014)."Sex, Disability, and Economic Discrimination".Historicizing Liberal American Transnormativities: Media, Medicine, Activism, 1960-1990 (Ph.D.). University of Toronto. pp. 244–249.hdl:1807/68460. Retrieved28 July 2020.
  34. ^"U.S. judge allows first transgender person to sue under disability law".Reuters. 2017-05-19. Retrieved2023-07-22.
  35. ^ab"Analysis: We must better address the needs of LGBT people with disabilities".NBC News. 2017-09-15. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  36. ^abcdefSmith, Jennifer (2017-06-22)."LGBTQ+ People With Developmental Disabilities Need Respect, Privacy, and Access to Community".Slate.ISSN 1091-2339. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  37. ^abO'Shea, Amie; Piantedosi, Diana (2022-06-13)."'What matters is hope, freedom and saying who you are.' What LGBTQ+ people with intellectual disabilities want everyone to know".The Conversation. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  38. ^Gurza, Andrew (2016-05-20)."I'm a Queer Man with Disabilities & STD Testing Isn't Accessible—Something Needs to Change".www.out.com. Retrieved2023-07-22.
  39. ^Smith, Elizabeth; Zirnsak, Tessa-May; Power, Jennifer; Lyons, Anthony; Bigby, Christine (January 2022)."Social inclusion of LGBTQ+ and gender diverse adults with intellectual disability in disability services: A systematic review of the literature".Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities.35 (1):46–59.doi:10.1111/jar.12925.ISSN 1360-2322.PMID 34309149.S2CID 236431413.
  40. ^abFoglia, Mary Beth; Fredriksen-Goldsen, Karen I. (2014)."Health Disparities among LGBT Older Adults and the Role of Nonconscious Bias".The Hastings Center Report.44 (5):S40 –S44.doi:10.1002/hast.369.ISSN 0093-0334.JSTOR 44159365.PMC 4365932.PMID 25231786.
  41. ^abCarter, Christin (2023-01-27)."The caregiver crisis hits LGBTQ+ elderly and disabled people hardest".Wisconsin Examiner. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  42. ^"MPs hear of barriers facing LGBT disabled people who need social care".Disability News Service. 2019-06-20. Retrieved2023-07-22.
  43. ^Reygan, Finn; Henderson, Neil; Khan, Jamil (January 2022)."'I'm black, a woman, disabled and lesbian': LGBT ageing and care services at the intersections in South Africa".Sexualities.25 (1–2):63–78.doi:10.1177/1363460720975322.ISSN 1363-4607.S2CID 229417941.
  44. ^Timoner, Rachel (1992-10-15)."Double Minority: On Being Disabled and Gay".Bay Area Reporter. Vol. XXII, no. 42. p. 25.
  45. ^ab"For queer people with disabilities, the path to acceptance is more arduous".kathmandupost.com. Retrieved2023-07-22.
  46. ^"LGBTQ+ lawyers and attorneys with disabilities report prevalent discrimination, ABA study says".ABA Journal. Retrieved2023-07-22.
  47. ^abcMartino, Alan Santinele; Coombs, Emily (2023-06-25)."Making pride more inclusive means creating space for 2SLGBTQ+ people with disabilities".The Conversation. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  48. ^Dubreuil, Laurence Brisson (May 13, 2023)."Calgary queer venues lack accessibility. A new campaign could help change that".CBC News. RetrievedJuly 21, 2023.
  49. ^abKim, Sarah."Pride Month Too Often Overlooks LGBTQ+ Members With Disabilities".Forbes. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  50. ^Kliem, Theresa (June 15, 2023)."Accessibility issues at Pride events, LGBTQ+ spaces can be isolating, say people with disabilities".CBC News.
  51. ^Richards, Mary (25 June 1987)."A Silence Not Golden".Bay Area Reporter. Vol. 17, no. 26. p. 25.
  52. ^Lewis, Laura Foran; Ward, Caroline; Jarvis, Noah; Cawley, Eleni (2021-07-01). ""Straight Sex is Complicated Enough!": The Lived Experiences of Autistics Who are Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Asexual, or Other Sexual Orientations".Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders.51 (7):2324–2337.doi:10.1007/s10803-020-04696-w.ISSN 1573-3432.PMID 32968942.S2CID 221884388.
  53. ^Kelleher, Patrick (2023-01-30)."Gay deaf man shared 'hurtful' Grindr messages to make point about queer ableism".PinkNews. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  54. ^Millard, Elizabeth (2022-02-14)."Life at the Intersection of Disability and LGBTQ+".Quest | Muscular Dystrophy Association. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  55. ^abcMayor, Lola (2022-06-18)."Pride month: 'Being disabled and gay - I've faced barriers'".BBC News. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  56. ^Jackson, Callum (2023-03-06)."LGBTQ+ body standards are even more menacing for disabled queer people".LGBTQ+ Nation. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  57. ^"'Not hiding is an act of revolution': Dating as an LGBTQIA+ person with a disability".ABC Everyday. 2022-08-23. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  58. ^Jones, Peter (26 January 2017)."Wheels of Change: Dating for Gay Men with Disabilities".Medill School of Journalism. Northwestern University.Archived from the original on 21 April 2021. Retrieved14 March 2021.
  59. ^Wolfe, Kathi (2022-06-09)."Disabled queer people increasingly feel Pride in themselves".Washington Blade. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  60. ^abc"5 LGBT disability organisations you should support".Stonewall. 2020-11-17. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  61. ^Dobson, Tileah (2023-04-22)."New Organisation That Advocates For LGBT+ People With Disabilities Launched In Melbourne".Star Observer. Retrieved2023-07-21.
  62. ^"These Queer, Disabled Characters Are Bringing Unfiltered Representation to Your Screens".Them. 2022-07-26. Retrieved2023-08-11.
  63. ^"Where We Are on TV Report 2022-2023 - GLAAD".glaad.org. 2023-03-16. Retrieved2023-08-14.
  64. ^Carrie (2016-09-27)."Margarita With a Straw Comes to Netflix, (Almost) Delivers the Disabled Queer Character We Need".Autostraddle. Retrieved2023-07-22.
  65. ^"Netflix's 'Special' hopes to break new ground for disability representation on TV".USA TODAY. Retrieved2023-08-14.
  66. ^"Dykes, Disability and Stuff (Madison, WI) Winter, 1988-1989 Vol. 1 Issue. 3".Dykes, Disability and Stuff. 1988–1989. pp. [1]–. Retrieved2023-08-11.
  67. ^Ruth, Barbara; Edgington, Amy; zana; Hawthorne, Susan; Hugs, Diane; Rome, Jo Anne; Dinnerstein, Barbara N.; Myers, Teresa; Sorella, Naja; Pratt, Pamela; Winnow, Jackie; Dee, Mandy; Lauby, Adrienne; Lambert, Sandra; Smith, Tee (1990-01-01)."On Disability".Sinister Wisdom (39).
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